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A cluster used in a calculation of an acetate molecule interacting with sodium surrounded by waters. The spectra show a shift to higher in energy for sodium (blue), relative to potassium (red), indicative of a stronger interaction.
NEXAFS involves the promotion of a core-level electron to antibonding molecular orbitals and Rydberg states. Both of these are diffuse states that extend far beyond the molecule of interest, making them extremely sensitive to changes in molecular geometry and environment, such as the addition of nearby ions. The experiments were conducted in an aqueous solution in order to emulate biological conditions. NEXAFS is a high-vacuum technique, so several additional techniques were required to maintain low-enough pressures for experiments on the liquid samples, such as the liquid microjet, which was used to introduce the cations into the experiment. This key component permitted a vacuum state and provided a renewable sample, avoiding x-ray damage.
Using carbonyl (C=O) NEXAFS as a measuring stick, the group measured the selective interactions at the carbon K-edge in order to avoid the water signal that dominates oxygen K-edge spectra. For acetate, the carbon K-edge spectra for interactions with potassium, sodium, and lithium, respectively, were successively slightly higher in energy (blue shifted). For formate, there was a distinctly large shift between lithium and the other ions, whereas sodium and potassium were indistinguishable. The difference between acetate and formate was understood by the "Law of Matching Water Ion Affinities," a proposed explanation for Hofmeister effects that attributes the stability of ion pairs to their hydration pairing; that is, the difference between the hydration energies of acetate and formate relative to those of the alkali cations accounts for their dissimilarities in preferential interactions and thus the difference in spectral trends.

The experimental setup comprises a main chamber, detector, liquid microjet, skimmer, liquid nitrogen traps, turbo pumps, and a differential pump section (not shown here).
A density functional theory program (StoBe deMon) was used to calculate spectra as confirmation of the phenomenon. A molecular dynamics trajectory was run to gather information about the different positions the molecules could be in. The coordinates were then input into StoBe deMon, and spectra were calculated and averaged together to account for the different molecular motions on the spectra.
The team's results establish a way of probing selective interactions of ions with biological molecules in aqueous environments under relevant conditions and provide support for the Law of Matching Water Affinities, whßich invokes ion pairing to explain Hofmeister effects on proteins. Future work will involve additional testing of this phenomenon of selective interactions with +2 metals, and examining other ion-pairing interactions and other model systems such as amino acids, polypeptides, and DNA.
Research conducted by: J.S. Uejio, C.P. Schwartz, A.M. Duffin, W.S. Drisdell, R.C. Cohen, and R.J. Saykally (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and University of California, Berkeley).
Research funding: U.S. Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES) and the National Science Foundation Atmospheric Chemistry Program. Operation of the ALS is supported by BES.
Publication about this research: J.S. Uejio, C.P. Schwartz, A.M. Duffin, W.S. Drisdell, R.C. Cohen, and R.J. Saykally, "Characterization of selective binding of alkali cations with carboxylate by x-ray absorption spectroscopy of liquid microjets," PNAS 105, 6809 (2008). |